TILLAMOOK HEAJOJGHT. MAY 6, 1919. !Sa5ZÏÏ2525asa5Z52S2Sa DIG IT UP! I WHAT ? .8 That SAVE MONEY Sale Sheet that came in your last c week’s Headlight. Read every word of it, check the items c needed, for the Sale is to be continued for another Week ending c Saturday Evening, May 10th. All One day Specials are goods for every day in the week or until sold out. Do You Wear Socks, Stockings,! or Hose. | To get you acquainted with our large stock of hosiery S and to show you that they have the quality, also that you can g buy your hosiery here for the entire family at a saving, weg are offering you the following opportunity.- S ONE PAIR HOSE FREE With every three pair hose you buy (for man, woman or§ child) you get a pair hose free. You need not buy all of one § kind, size or price. You buy three pair and the average priced per pair paid is the price of the pair you get free. Example. § If you buy three pair paying 99 cents for them the average H price would be 33 cents. You would be entitled to a pair S free costing 33 cents. Or you may select a higher price hose § paying the difference in cash. Buy all you needjduring this week. | CROCKERY AND DISHES. | If you are in need of Cups*and Saucers or Dishes of any g kind, get them at a saving during this sale. § | Smithy’s 252SHS252Sa5H52S25H5252SHSa5a5H5aSHSaSMH5aSH5252S2SH5B5H52SZ5aS2SZS2525a5E5ZSZS2S25aS25Z5BS25a5E52SaSE525aS Notice. This is to give notice that persons are forbidden to trespass upon our premises, for hunting is strictly pro­ hibited. H. F. Goodspeed, F. M. Trout. Our Platform. Sold by Tillamook Feed Company. C. 0. & C. M. Dawson Conover & Condit. Geo. R. Edmunds. Tillamook. Oregon A. Anderson, Wheeler, Ore. W. A. Rowe, Brighton, Oregon. Wilson & Co., Beaver. Mohler Supply Co., Mohler. 'Si* zMORETftANEVER j/our rsjiy da/s must be productive UMatorkrrom ------- o-------- We have no apologies to make, neither have we done you any dis­ honest tricks to make good. If any­ thing you have bought from us have not given satisfaction we will make good if you let us know. On this platform we are building up a nice business. Call and see us in our new location. Tillamook Tire Co. When contemplating Monumental E. F. Rogers. Mgr. work, do not over look White Bronze. This material cannot rust or corode. There is nothing to support vegetable life. It is hard and dense and will not chip or crack. In beauty of design, artistic and general effect no stone can compare with White Bronze. Represented By C. E. REYNOLDS. — Oregon. I Tillamook Change of Location. ------- o------- The building owned by F. R. Beals, located on the corner of 2nd Ave. & 4th St., occupied by the Tillamook Tire Co. and Mrs. E. F. Rogers’ Mil­ linery Store, is being moved this week to the corner of 3rd Ave. and 3rd St., across the corner from the Tillamook Hotel. The old building will undergo a thorough repairing full shoulder, ch .st and painting, and the same business lines will be carried on, only in a and arnxs-canfcrtable. s more extensive way. The Bame plan of square dealing long wearing. and abiding by the Golden Rule will guaranteed go forward that has built up these businesses to itB present magnitude, and, in fact, only time will tell of H.JT. Botts. Pre». 1 Attorney j the development of these businesses in Tillamook. We certainly appre­ dt-Law. ciate our patrons and will try to do John Leland Henderson, Sec­ all within our power to satisfy them. retary Treaa., Attorney-at- We will be glad to meet all of our I.aw and Notrary Public. customers in our new location and many new ones. We are here to stay, and will «are you money in your purchases. Both phones will be in­ stalled again as soon as possible. Your» for business. Law A bat ra eta Real Eatate Tillamook Tire Co. Insurance. E. F. Rogers, Mgr. Both Phone* Mrs. E. F. Rogers, Milli­ TULA HOOK—OBKGON. ner and Artist. TOWKlMim REFLEX SUCRE R Cut in Tillamook Title and ^Abstract Co. Registered Calves For Sale. Two heifer calves, well bred, one bull calf—Dams Sire St. Maure, the 31700 bull. Dam Katy of Shady Lawn farm Bold for >500 at Curtis sale. P. W. Todd. If • I Were a Farmer. If I were a farmer I would keep at 'hand a few reliable medicines for minor ailments that are not so ser­ ious as to require the attention of a physician' such as Chamberlain’B Colic and Diarrhoea Remedy for bowel complaints. Chamberlain’B Cough Remedy for coughs, colds and croup. Chamberlain’s linament for sprains bruses and rheumatic pains. By having these articles at hand it would often save the trouble of a trip to town in the busiest season or in the night, and would enable me to treat slight ailments as soon as they appear, and thereby avoid the more serious diseases that bo often follow.—Adv. Notice. The County Court will receive sealed bids for furnishing 100 eordB of wood to be delivered at the Tilla­ mook County Court House during the month of August, 1919, said bids to be for fifty cords of alder wood and remaining fifty cords of either Alder Hemlock or fir slabs. Bids to be opened May Sth. 1919, at 10 a.m. The Court reserves the right to ac­ cept or reject any or all blds on either 100 or SO cord lots. Erwin Harrison, Clerk. ANCIENT OLD TRADING POST BEST TREATMENT FOR “COLD" BEFORE THE AGE OF STEAM inhalation ef Steam Declared te Be a Remedy Superior ts «minis • tration of Drugs. Reminiscences of Tima Whan th» Stags Coach Waa Moat Important Method of Travel. About Fort Smith There teems te Gather All the Romano» of the “Silent Places.’ "It was a hili village on the stage “What medicine may 1 give my baby Of all the glamorous old trading road midway between —— and —. a het he has a cold?” This Is a ques- poets of the Honorable Hudson Bay 'lon which Is asked repeatedly. My stage roads In the year 1840 varied company, there is none with more of with the seaaona from bad to worse. In inswer la, “None." Not that the least the romance of the silent places about the spring they were riven of mud ■*lgn of a cold should be lightly re- It than Fort Smith, perched above the through which the jaded horses .rnrded. but been use there are other Rapids of the Drowned on the Slave md better remedies than medicine. dragged the coach wearily; In tbe river, writes “Nlksiih" In the Chicago Most drugs given for colds upset the summer the passengers were choked Dally News. The Slave flows here with dust, and In the autumn, by rea­ stomach, more or less, so much so that from Lake Athabasca to Great Slave son of the ruts and boles In the road, a few doses will seriously harm that lake, aud balf-way on its Journey, just organ; and when an Infant's or small they were tossed about like dice In a where the sixtieth parallel of north child’s stomach and digestion are dis­ box; io wiuter the roads were blocked latitude divides the province of Al­ turbed not enough nourishment is re­ with enow, but the stage, when there berta from the Northwest Territory, it tained to keep up the child's strength was a stage, always came Into our passes Fort Smith. village with a clatter of galloping and combat the Infectlr^—-for almost The fort Is set high above the trou­ every so-called “cold” is caused by an horses and sounding born. Its round bled waters several hundred feet up Infectious germ. body, swung on lestber straps. Its gal­ the steep, rocky bank. A fine spot The most sane and effectual method lant driver, Its four smoking horses for defense it was. In the early days, of treating children's colds is by the and Its merry horns were followed by bnt now that attaeka are over It la an Inhaling of steam, plain or medicated, shouting boys, who swung from th» inconvenient location In spite of lu nnd by the application of mustard or straps of the boot or fell off In a picturesque qualities. All day long Mime other equally good counter-lrrl- cloud of dust Tbe stage driver was you can see those who are in the bib­ tanL The steam lubricates and soothes h IMU'sonage In every village that de­ lical phrase “drawers ot water” toll­ the Irritated and inflamed passages | pended on his arrival for tbe dally ing up the steep path with yoked buck­ which lead down Into the lungs, as mail and tbe latest news from the out­ ets over their shoulders—Indian wom­ well as the air cells ot the lungs thein- side world. He was gazed upon with en and children, servants of the com­ sehes. The mustard paste affords re­ awe by the children as a sort of hero pany, carrying every drop that Is lief by drawing the blood from the of romance, who never worked, but drunk, and whatever may be used for congested air cells In the lungs to the drove galloping horses back and forth other purposes. It Is no discredit to surface of the skin. Either one of through a perpetual holiday. He was wash sparingly In Fort Smith. One these methods Is more sure and acta an expert with the reins whose repu­ must needs have scant consideration more quickly In giving relief than any tation was counties wide. As be for the value of human labor to do treatment with drugs. — Marlanni whirled up to the tavern porch, the otherwise. leaders of bls team, which. It was Wheeler In People's Home Journal. All about the trading post are scat­ whispered, bad been sold tn the stage tered the tepees of the Indians, wan­ company by the farmers been use of derers of the great woods, on their an­ LONG BUSY PLACE OF TRADE their vicious tricks, walked around to nual trading expedition. They bring the stable with drooping heads and Into their familiar stalls a» soon as with them the breath of the vast woods For Centuries, as Today, All Eastern Roads and Caravan Routes their traces were unhooked, as Inno­ country; Its struggle has shaped their Meet at Aleppo. cent-looking as If they had never tight-lipped mouths, its loneliness has kicked a farmer’s boy or picked up a made their steady black eyes lnscrut- j From time Immemorial Aleppo has groom by the collar.”—William Henry able; Its mystery has made their laugh Shelton In Ceutury. a low, quick bitten thing, like a laugh been a meeting place of roads and snatched in the shadow of terror. All caravan routes, ailke from the West these things the white woodsmen show mid from the uttermost East Figura­ even more strongly, with the quicker tively and literally, all roads still, to­ SPEECH THAT “MADE” RILEY impressionability of finer "clay. The | day, in Asia Minor, and from the Incident In Early Life of Beloved In­ northern woods runner Is a man apart, South, lead to Aleppo, while In Its diana Port That Is Well Werth greatest bazars la to be found mer ­ almost a separate species of the tin­ Recalling. man animal, shaped by the relentless chandise from the ends of the earth. pressure of an Irresistible environ- i Brass and silver work from India; After many disappointments In tor- Chinese Ivories and porcelain; lac­ meat. quered bowls from Japan; carpets and tube, James Whitcomb Riley was em­ rugs from everywhere where carpets ployed. at a few dollars a'week, as WHERE AMERICA WAS NAMED and rugs are woven, from China to the writer on the Indianapolis Journal. Bosporus, and so on, almost Indefinite­ Shortly after. Llje Halford, who was House Is Still Standing In Which ly. Nothing else, as one writer justly afterward private secretary to Presi­ Learned Men Awarded Voyager remarks, gives such an ldsa of Alep­ dent Harrison, came to the paper as an Undeserved Honor. po’s Importance as one of the great managing editor. He decided to cut clearing bouses of the East as those down expenses and began by discharg­ Many readers who keep scrap-books enormous, unending, vaulted bazars, ing Riley as bls first victim. The blow will be glad of this morsel of curious lined with shops and thronged with was a bard one for Riley, and he waa lore. [teople. The grand bazar of Stambul discouraged and about ready to give Ot> April 25, 1507, the learned heads Is great of Its kind, but the Aleppo up In despair. But a couple of days of the University of St. Die. In Lor­ bazar is sltogether greater. “You may later there was a political convention raine, decided. Incorrectly, that Amer­ wander In it for a couple of hours In the city and one of the men nomi­ igo Vespucci was entitled to the honor and never seem to go over the same nated was a big fellow who had never ground twice; always fresh ramifica­ nude a speech In hie life. He was of discovery. Christopher Columbus having only reached the Islands of the tions come Into view and give a choioe called on to speak, and, shifting from one foot to tbe other In perfect agony West Indies, and that the western of fresh turnings to be taken.” for a moment he blurted out: “Gen­ hemisphere should bear his name. The tlemen. I thank you for this nomina­ name “America" was. as a matter of Each One's Success. tion. I can’t make a speech, but I fact, first used In the book "Cosinog- One's success or failure Is deter­ rapblae Introductlo," by Martin Wald- mined largely by the manner in which can tell you one thing: The ticket seemuller, professor of cosmography at the Individual spends his or her lei­ you've nominated today Is goln' to win ’when the frost is on the punkin’ the university. sure. It seems that many of us are It has since been shown that Amer­ prone “to ride our hobbles" to the ul­ and the fodder's In the shock.' ” That speech took the bouse by igo Vespucci was preceded by both timate. One plays cards every eve­ Christopher Columbus and John Cabot, ning; another shoots halls on a green storm and it was evident that the del­ but It was too late—the new w'orld table; another Is a movie devotee, and egates'and the spectators had read had been dubbed “America,” and the some one else a dance crank night this poem of Riley's which had ap­ fact advertised in print. The house after night. All these things are good peared In the paper Just a few days where the meeting was held at which or bad In proportion to the degree In before. The circumstance brought the the classical error was made still which they rest us or improve us. We papev back to Riley's rescue, and his stands at St. Die (Vosges), and Is an­ need a more harmonious development. first book, "The Old Swlmmln' Holo nually visited by many tourists, es­ It la 'obvious that the supreme pur­ and 'Leven More Poems,” was pub­ pecially those from both North nnd pose of life Is to have a goal ahead lished and made a grent hit The orig­ South America. and to use every effort to attain the inal copy of this book recently sold HenCe the error of learned men Is great objective. He or she who has for »2.500. responsible for America being named found his or her work in the scheme of after Amerigo Vespucci, who was things is quite happy. In tbe Land ef Ancient History. We should given an honor he clearly did not de­ devote our leisure time to the acquir­ Amman, mentioned In the B'ble a» serve. ing of greater efficiency, with a certain Kabbah. the capltul of Ainmoi. was amount of play and recreation to re­ taken by David after Uriah had fallen fresh us. The pursuit of pleasure In the siege. It has a station on the Rule for Verse Writers. Free verse, says a critic. Is only a merely "to kill time” Is a mistake. Ter fuel Is most Cheerfulness is hard work when It better with a return of milk equal to convenient whenever an Individual sol­ has to soak In from the outside. A 20 per cent of Its food.—Newark dier wishes to wnrm up a mugful of person may be surrounded by Innum­ News. soup or coffee. erable blessings and yet wear a gloomy face, and keep a sullen heart, Famous Japanese ShrlnA At a G ums . for It takes a long time for these ex­ The golden tenip>e. one of the most An Instructor In workshop arithme­ ternal benefits to Alter through to the famous of Jtipane-e shrines. In sur­ tic. etc.. to would-be air mechanics at a springs of life and change the bitter rounded by a gnrden which han been large camp In England writes to say water» to sweet. Cheerfulness, to be growing for centuries. So artistically that the lack of knowledge of the moat easy and natural and spontaneous, lias his work been done that the arti­ elementary arithmetic displayed by must start Inside. Inborn good cheer fices of rhe gardener are not very some of his charges Is astounding. will transform all our surroundings pronounced, with the noticeable ex­ As a typical instance, he relates that much more readily than our exiernal ception of the grent old pine tree, ha had no little trouble In convincing blessings can transform our outlook which glows In a court surrounded one young mao that there were 100 on life. on three sides by monastery build­ bundredtha In an Inch. He next asked ings. his pupil bow many thonaandths be Valuable Gama. It In trained In the shnpe of a funk, reckoned there would be In an Inch. ”Do you think a person ought to hull, mas’ and sail being reproduced. After gaxlng long nnd «-smestly nt Ills For centuries the patient prlewis have put all bls eggs lit one basket T' ruler, the youth answered: "Yea. And then lock the bosket op bent, pruned. pried tie«' "ml propped “Blimey I There must be millions of up th» limbs and twigs of thia tree. in ■ Mfa deposit box.” *•■1"